Newcomers to Canada whose names index identities other than ‘‘white’’ and ‘‘English’’ face pressure to alter their names to facilitate integration. Some immigrants oppose the forces of conformity and refuse to assimilate their names. In interviews, they explain this stance using discourses of agency centering on a belief in true names, a moral obligation to get names right, and a need for a strong self. Focusing on ideologies of identity and language in their meta-agentive discourses, I argue that the act of immigrants keeping their ethnic names is a political move to redistribute responsibility for the integration of newcomers into the host society
Increasingly, immigrants, especially those from non-Western countries, are suspected of being unwill...
grantor: University of TorontoPluralist societies, particularly those whose pluralism is ...
Names are a social connector, symbolizing personal identity, familial relationships and ancestry. Wh...
This dissertation responds to the question of why people who immigrate to Ontario, Canada frequently...
This article illuminates the social structures and relations that shape agency for members of two ma...
In this paper, I analysed Korean ESL immigrants ’ ethnic name changing phenomena. The interpretive d...
ii This qualitative study addresses name choice among Chinese/Chinese-heritage students at two Ontar...
Abstract For immigrant-receiving societies that also claim to embrace diversity, there is a const...
Individuals have the option to maintain ties to their ancestral country while settling into Canada. ...
Names have long been connected with an individual’s perception of themselves and their identities. ...
The note focuses on the initiative of renaming some places in Canada to celebrate the year of Canada...
The immigration process impacts the identity of ethnocultural, racial, religious, and linguistic min...
Immigration is a global trend, which increases the ethnic, racial and religious diversity in the imm...
peer reviewedThe present study explores the case of a transnational Polish family in Norway in which...
Since the beginning of the 20th century, name changing has been at the center of conversion processe...
Increasingly, immigrants, especially those from non-Western countries, are suspected of being unwill...
grantor: University of TorontoPluralist societies, particularly those whose pluralism is ...
Names are a social connector, symbolizing personal identity, familial relationships and ancestry. Wh...
This dissertation responds to the question of why people who immigrate to Ontario, Canada frequently...
This article illuminates the social structures and relations that shape agency for members of two ma...
In this paper, I analysed Korean ESL immigrants ’ ethnic name changing phenomena. The interpretive d...
ii This qualitative study addresses name choice among Chinese/Chinese-heritage students at two Ontar...
Abstract For immigrant-receiving societies that also claim to embrace diversity, there is a const...
Individuals have the option to maintain ties to their ancestral country while settling into Canada. ...
Names have long been connected with an individual’s perception of themselves and their identities. ...
The note focuses on the initiative of renaming some places in Canada to celebrate the year of Canada...
The immigration process impacts the identity of ethnocultural, racial, religious, and linguistic min...
Immigration is a global trend, which increases the ethnic, racial and religious diversity in the imm...
peer reviewedThe present study explores the case of a transnational Polish family in Norway in which...
Since the beginning of the 20th century, name changing has been at the center of conversion processe...
Increasingly, immigrants, especially those from non-Western countries, are suspected of being unwill...
grantor: University of TorontoPluralist societies, particularly those whose pluralism is ...
Names are a social connector, symbolizing personal identity, familial relationships and ancestry. Wh...